Andrey Vyshinsky

Andrey Vyshinsky, Vyshinsky also spelled Vishinsky, (born November 28 [December 10, New Style], 1883, Odessa, Russia—died November 22, 1954, New York, New York, U.S.), Soviet statesman, diplomat, and lawyer who was the chief prosecutor during the Great Purge trials in Moscow in the 1930s.

Vyshinsky became widely known in 1933 during the Metro-Vickers trial, in which several British engineers were charged with trying to wreck Soviet hydroelectric constructions. During the Great Purge trials (1934–38), in which he prosecuted many prominent former Soviet leaders for treason, he gained worldwide notoriety as an aggressive and vengeful courtroom lawyer.

Becoming a member of the party’s Central Committee, as well as deputy commissar of foreign affairs, by 1940, Vyshinsky supervised the incorporation of Latvia into the Soviet Union in 1940 and later arranged for a communist regime to assume control of Romania (1945). In March 1949 he became foreign minister and, representing the Soviet Union at the United Nations, frequently launched bitter verbal attacks on the United States, which was soon engaged in the Korean War. After Joseph Stalin’s death in 1953, Vyshinsky was demoted to first deputy foreign minister, but he remained at the UN as the permanent Soviet representative until his own death a year later.